A negotiated solution to the Iranian nuclear crisis is within
reach
The US must take three basic steps to defuse this confrontation.
The consequences of not doing so could be grim
By Noam Chomsky
06/19/06 "The
Guardian" -- -- The urgency of halting the
proliferation of nuclear weapons, and moving toward their
elimination, could hardly be greater. Failure to do so is almost
certain to lead to grim consequences, even the end of biology's
only experiment with higher intelligence. As threatening as the
crisis is, the means exist to defuse it.
A near-meltdown seems to be imminent over Iran and its nuclear
programmes. Before 1979, when the Shah was in power, Washington
strongly supported these programmes. Today the standard claim is
that Iran has no need for nuclear power, and therefore must be
pursuing a secret weapons programme. "For a major oil producer
such as Iran, nuclear energy is a wasteful use of resources,"
Henry Kissinger wrote in the Washington Post last year.
Thirty years ago, however, when Kissinger was secretary of state
for President Gerald Ford, he held that "introduction of nuclear
power will both provide for the growing needs of Iran's economy
and free remaining oil reserves for export or conversion to
petrochemicals".
Last year Dafna Linzer of the Washington Post asked Kissinger
about his reversal of opinion. Kissinger responded with his
usual engaging frankness: "They were an allied country."
In 1976 the Ford administration "endorsed Iranian plans to build
a massive nuclear energy industry, but also worked hard to
complete a multibillion-dollar deal that would have given Tehran
control of large quantities of plutonium and enriched uranium -
the two pathways to a nuclear bomb", Linzer wrote. The top
planners of the Bush administration, who are now denouncing
these programmes, were then in key national security posts: Dick
Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz.
Iranians are surely not as willing as the west to discard
history to the rubbish heap. They know that the United States,
along with its allies, has been tormenting Iranians for more
than 50 years, ever since a US-UK military coup overthrew the
parliamentary government and installed the Shah, who ruled with
an iron hand until a popular uprising expelled him in 1979.
The Reagan administration then supported Saddam Hussein's
invasion of Iran, providing him with military and other aid that
helped him slaughter hundreds of thousands of Iranians (along
with Iraqi Kurds). Then came President Clinton's harsh
sanctions, followed by Bush's threats to attack Iran -
themselves a serious breach of the UN charter.
Last month the Bush administration conditionally agreed to join
its European allies in direct talks with Iran, but refused to
withdraw the threat of attack, rendering virtually meaningless
any negotiations offer that comes, in effect, at gunpoint.
Recent history provides further reason for scepticism about
Washington's intentions.
In May 2003, according to Flynt Leverett, then a senior official
in Bush's National Security Council, the reformist government of
Mohammad Khatami proposed "an agenda for a diplomatic process
that was intended to resolve on a comprehensive basis all of the
bilateral differences between the United States and Iran".
Included were "weapons of mass destruction, a two-state solution
to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the future of Lebanon's
Hizbullah organisation and cooperation with the UN nuclear
safeguards agency", the Financial Times reported last month. The
Bush administration refused, and reprimanded the Swiss diplomat
who conveyed the offer.
A year later the European Union and Iran struck a bargain: Iran
would temporarily suspend uranium enrichment, and in return
Europe would provide assurances that the United States and
Israel would not attack Iran. Under US pressure, Europe backed
off, and Iran renewed its enrichment processes.
Iran's nuclear programmes, as far as is known, fall within its
rights under article four of the non-proliferation treaty (NPT),
which grants non-nuclear states the right to produce fuel for
nuclear energy. The Bush administration argues that article four
should be strengthened, and I think that makes sense.
When the NPT came into force in 1970 there was a considerable
gap between producing fuel for energy and for nuclear weapons.
But advances in technology have narrowed the gap. However, any
such revision of article four would have to ensure unimpeded
access for non-military use, in accord with the initial NPT
bargain between declared nuclear powers and the non-nuclear
states.
In 2003 a reasonable proposal to this end was put forward by
Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy
Agency: that all production and processing of weapon-usable
material be under international control, with "assurance that
legitimate would-be users could get their supplies". That should
be the first step, he proposed, toward fully implementing the
1993 UN resolution for a fissile material cutoff treaty (or
Fissban).
ElBaradei's proposal has to date been accepted by only one
state, to my knowledge: Iran, in February, in an interview with
Ali Larijani, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator. The Bush
administration rejects a verifiable Fissban - and stands nearly
alone. In November 2004 the UN committee on disarmament voted in
favour of a verifiable Fissban. The vote was 147 to one (United
States), with two abstentions: Israel and Britain. Last year a
vote in the full general assembly was 179 to two, Israel and
Britain again abstaining. The United States was joined by Palau.
There are ways to mitigate and probably end these crises. The
first is to call off the very credible US and Israeli threats
that virtually urge Iran to develop nuclear weapons as a
deterrent.
A second step would be to join the rest of the world in
accepting a verifiable Fissban treaty, as well as ElBaradei's
proposal, or something similar.
A third step would be to live up to article six of the NPT,
which obligates the nuclear states to take "good-faith" efforts
to eliminate nuclear weapons, a binding legal obligation, as the
world court determined. None of the nuclear states has lived up
to that obligation, but the United States is far in the lead in
violating it.
Even steps in these directions would mitigate the upcoming
crisis with Iran. Above all, it is important to heed the words
of Mohamed ElBaradei: "There is no military solution to this
situation. It is inconceivable. The only durable solution is a
negotiated solution." And it is within reach.
Noam Chomsky's new book is Failed States: The Abuse of Power and
the Assault on Democracy; he is professor of linguistics and
philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
© Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006.
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